Armenian Navy Band And System Of A Down Going To Release Joint Album

ARMENIAN NAVY BAND AND SYSTEM OF A DOWN GOING TO RELEASE JOINT ALBUM

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.04.2006 23:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Navy Band and System of A Down are
going to release a joint album, Armenian Navy Band manager John
Grigorian told reporters. He also informed that the Armenian Navy
Band and Arto Tunjboyajian will give a concert in Avanguarde-Folk
Club in Yerevan April 22.

To note, the Armenian Navy Band received The Audience Award 2006 as
the Best European Band at the annual BBC World Music Award contest.
From: Baghdasarian

Senor Asratyan: No Periodical Trainings Held In NKR

SENOR ASRATYAN: NO PERIODICAL TRAININGS HELD IN NKR

PanARMENIAN.Net
13.04.2006 21:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Some Azeri media spread information, according
to which the Halo Trust Company is engaged in illegal activity in
the occupied territories of Azerbaijan under the pretext of mine
clearance. As APA reports quoting First secretary of Azerbaijan’s
Embassy in Belgium, Fuad Humbetov the Halo Trust company “questioned
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.”

As head of the department of Information and Propaganda of the
NKR Defense Ministry, lieutenant colonel Senor Asratyan told
PanARMENIAN.Net the Halo Trust is really engaged in mine clearance of
the NKR regions that suffered during the national liberation war in
1991-1994. “The Azeri party is as usual exercising misinformation. No
periodical trainings are conducted on the NKR territory, more over
by an NGO,” lieut. col. Asratyan said.
From: Baghdasarian

Scott Garrett: “We Believe Armenia Will Not Abandon Democratic Path”

SCOTT GARRETT: “WE BELIEVE ARMENIA WILL NOT ABANDON DEMOCRATIC PATH”

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.04.2006 22:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If the upcoming elections in 2007 and 2008 are
undemocratic the U.S. can reconsider the Millenium Challenge Compact
with Armenia, Congressman Scott Garrett told reporters in Yerevan. In
his words, transparent and fair elections provide not only for
openness on the election day but also for the election campaign,
the role of media and the work with the NGOs. “However we believe
that Armenia will not abandon democratic path and will properly hold
the parliamentary and presidential election,” he remarked.

The Congressman also said that struggle against corruption occupies
a special places in the program.

“Corruption exists everywhere and I think that the level of corruption
in your republic will lower,” Garrett said adding that he represents
New Jersey where many Armenians live.
From: Baghdasarian

RA State Budget Revenues In January-February 2006 Exceed By 5.7% Ind

RA STATE BUDGET REVENUES IN JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2006 EXCEED BY 5.7% INDEX OF SAME MONTHS OF 2005

Noyan Tapan
Apr 11 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-February 2006, the RA
state budget revenues and official transfers grew by 6.5% on the same
months of last year and made 55 bln 138.2 mln drams (about 127.2 mln
USD). According to the RA National Statistical Service, the state
budget revenues grew by 5.7% to 54 bln 741.7 mln drams. In the period
under review, the current revenues of the state budget increased by
1.3% to 52 bln 232.2 mln drams, while tax revenues – by 14.6% to 47 bln
297.4 mln drams. The state budget expenditures made 48 bln 147.1 mln
drams in January-February 2006, which exceeds by 26.5% the respective
index of last year. The budget surplus made 6,990.1 mln drams.
From: Baghdasarian

Turkish Court Drops State Slander Charges Against 4 Journalists

TURKISH COURT DROPS STATE SLANDER CHARGES AGAINST 4 JOURNALISTS
Chris Buell

JURIST
April 11 2006

[JURIST] A Turkish court on Tuesday dropped criminal charges against
four journalists over reports critical of a court opinion [JURIST
report] last fall, but the court upheld charges against a fifth
journalist. The court dismissed charges against the four because it
held that prosecutors failed to file charges within the two months
following publication of the stories. The court upheld charges against
Radikal columnist Murat Belge. Belge could face up to 10 years in
prison if convicted of the charge under Turkish Penal Code Article 301
[Amnesty International backgrounder], which criminalizes insulting
“state judicial institutions.”

The five journalists were accused [JURIST report] of publishing stories
critical of a court ruling that would have banned a conference on
Turkey’s involvement in the alleged genocide of its minority Armenian
population under the Ottoman Empire. Similar charges against novelist
Orhan Pamuk were dropped [JURIST report] earlier this year. Turkey
[JURIST news archive] has been under pressure from the EU to improve
its freedom of expression laws as part of its bid for EU membership.

/2006/04/turkish-court-drops-state-slander.php
From: Baghdasarian

http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase

Millennium Challenge Corporation Head Arriving In Yerevan

MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION HEAD ARRIVING IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.04.2006 20:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Chief Executive Officer of the US Millennium
Challenge Corporation John Danilovich is arriving in Yerevan
today. In the words of Minister of Finance and Economy of Armenia
Vardan Khachatryan, the aim of the visit is to discuss details of the
Millennium Challenge Account in Armenia, acquaint with preparation
works on establishment of the Millennium Challenge Corporation office
in Armenia, planned to be run in June 2006. Within the framework
of the visit projects already implemented in Armenia within the
Millennium Challenge Account and planned programs will be considered,
reports Novosti-Armenia.

To remark, the Compact on providing $235.5 million for 5 years
within the Millennium Challenge Account was signed in Washington by
V. Khachatryan and J. Danilovich on March 27.
From: Baghdasarian

Passion for song: Bayrakdarian uses voice as an expression of faith

Waterloo Record, Canada
April 8 2006

Passion for song

Isabel Bayrakdarian uses her voice as an expression of faith in God

LIANNE ELLIOTT

PHOTO BY LINDSAY LOZON
Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian is performing Bach’s St. Matthew Passion
with the Kitchener Waterloo Philharmonic Choir next Friday at the
Centre in the Square in Kitchener.

KITCHENER (Apr 8, 2006)

Wherever Isabel Bayrakdarian is, she’ll slip into the nearest church
and beg to sing a few songs with the choir.

She’ll put on whatever second-hand vestment the choirmaster can
scrounge up and line up alongside the other singers.

The Canadian soprano has done this while travelling through Europe,
North America and the Middle East.

Most of the time, the singers in the choirs will recognize her. They
realize the young woman begging to sing alongside them is actually
one of the fastest rising stars in the world of classical music.

But sometimes, Bayrakdarian can remain anonymous as she joins a
choir’s ranks.

“They can’t believe someone has come out of the blue to sing,” says
Bayrakdarian, who is performing with the Kitchener Waterloo
Philharmonic Choir on Friday.

“Sometimes they’ll say, ‘You should try taking singing lessons, you
have a good voice.’ ”

Bayrakdarian has performed with world-renown companies like the
Metropolitan Opera and the Lyric Opera of Chicago.

She has had triumphant concerts at New York’s Carnegie Hall, she’s
won three Juno Awards and she sang on the Grammy-winning Lord of the
Rings: The Two Towers soundtrack.

But still, she’s passionate about singing with small church choirs.
She joins them when she’s at home and when she’s on tour.

“What I love about that is that I’m expressing my faith and the
existence of God through the voice that he has given me,” she says,
on the telephone from her Toronto home.

“You’re using the voice to praise the one who created it.”

This is why Bayrakdarian is thrilled to be part of the philharmonic
choir’s traditional Good Friday concert.

This year, the choir will perform J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion at
the Centre in the Square.

The piece tells the Good Friday story, its lyrics using the words of
the Gospel of St. Matthew to tell of Jesus’ betrayal, suffering and
death.

“It’s what Christ went through,” Bayrakdarian says. “It’s moving as
well as humbling.

“To be given the opportunity to sing it and be a part of it — I
almost don’t feel we should be paid to do this.”

The concert promises to be spectacular, drawing 160 singers from the
Philharmonic choirs, a few dozen musicians from the
Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony and seven world-class soloists, including
Bayrakdarian.

It’s a piece of music that conductor Howard Dyck is passionate about.

“There is no doubt that the audience will be taken by the
magnificence and beauty of the music,” he says. “If they are
Christians, they’ll be taken and deeply touched by the story that is
so central to Christian faith.

“Even if they’re not Christians, there’s a deep humanity to Bach that
will touch them too.”

He has brought together a list of prominent singers to sing the key
parts of the passion.

Tenor John Aler, a great American singer, will play the crucial role
of the evangelist, the narrator of the passion. Gary Relyea, one of
Canada’s best bass-baritones, will sing the part of Jesus.

A Canadian up-and-comer, baritone Peter McGillivray is singing the
words of Peter, Pilot and Judas.

The philharmonic choir will sing the group parts — the disciples,
the mob, the high priests. Choir members will also sing verses that
allow Bach to interpret the work, asking what it means for the
listener.

Also on board are mezzo-soprano Susan Platts, a Kitchener woman who
studied under opera star Jessye Norman, and Joseph Schnurr, a young
Kitchener tenor who studies in Berlin.

And of course, there’s Bayrakdarian.

She has been singing ever since she was a little girl growing up in
Lebanon. At just 3 years old, she started singing with her mother,
sisters and brothers in the choir at their Armenian Apostolic Church,
the faith they belong to as Armenians.

But Bayrakdarian never imagined she could turn singing into a career.
After she and her family immigrated to Canada, she did a degree in
biomedical engineering at the University of Toronto.

“I was always good in math and sciences,” she says. “I thought that
was the path I was meant to do.”

Still, she took singing lessons on the side and entered local
competitions. In 2000, she won the Operalia competition, one of the
most prestigious international competitions for young singers. Her
singing career was born.

She now performs around the world and has made several recordings.
Last weekend, she and her husband, pianist Serouj Kradjian, won a
Juno for their recording of Viardot-Garcia: Lieder Chansons Canzoni
Mazurkan.

But Bayrakdarian has never performed St. Matthew Passion before. This
week, she and Dyck spent a day rehearsing her part at the piano in
her Toronto home.

Bayrakdarian will come to Kitchener on Wednesday to start rehearsing
with the full choir and orchestra.

“It went smoothly with Howard,” she says of the first rehearsal. “I’m
sure it will be just magical with an orchestra.”

[email protected]

CONCERT

What : J.S. Bach: St. Matthew Passion
When: Good Friday (April 14)
Who: Kitchener Waterloo Philharmonic Choir
with guests:
Isabel Bayrakdarian
Susan Platts
John Aler
Peter McGillivray
Joseph Schnurr
Gary Relyea
Where: Centre in the Square
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Cost: $33-$39
Phone: 519-578-1570
1-800-265-8977
From: Baghdasarian

Contract of Coach of Armenian Nat’l Team Henk Visman Not Prolonged

CONTRACT OF CHIEF TRAINER OF ARMENIAN NATIONAL TEAM HENK VISMAN NOT PROLONGED

YEREVAN, APRIL 7, NOYAN TAPAN. The Chairman of the Armenian Football
Federation did not prolong the contract of Henk Visman, chief trainer
of the Armenian national team, in consequence of not achieving any
agreement during the talks with the Armenian Football Federation.
Noyan Tapan was informed about it from the Armenian Football Federation.
From: Baghdasarian

MFA: Minister Oskanian Visits Moscow

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

07-04-2006

Minister Oskanian Visits Moscow

Minister Oskanian was in Moscow on a three-day working visit, April 5 – 7.

On the evening of May 5, he met with Igor Ivanov, Secretary of the Security
Council of the Russian Federation. During the meeting, the two discussed the
present status of Armenian-Russian relations and exchanged views on a number
of issues of mutual interest related to regional and international security
and stability.

On April 6, the Minister met with Yuri Merzlyakov, Russian co-chair of the
OSCE Minsk Group, at the Armenian Embassy in Russia.

Later in the day, Minister Oskanian met with Russian businessmen of Armenian
origin. He welcomed their interest and confidence in Armenia’s economy. He
expressed appreciation for the projects that Armenians from all over the
world implement in Armenia, but stressed the need for coordination of this
process. Specifically, he spoke about rural development in Armenia, which he
said will be one of the key items to be discussed at the third
Armenia-Diaspora Forum held on September 18-19.

The businessmen expressed their willingness to participate in these
discussions and undertake some concrete projects. They continued to discuss
prospects for Armenia’s development and Armenia-Diaspora interaction in
various economic fields.

In the afternoon, Minister Oskanian delivered a speech on “Cooperation and
Security in the South Caucasus” at the Carnegie Moscow Center, one of Russia’s
leading research centers for political and social studies. The audience
included representatives of governmental and political circles, as well as
think-tanks and institutions of higher education, diplomatic missions and
Russian and foreign mass media.

In the evening, the Minister met with young Armenians studying at Moscow
State University for International Relations.

Today, the Minister met with the Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
From: Baghdasarian

www.armeniaforeignministry.am